Last month, Kate Masur recounted in the New York Times Opinionator Senator Henry Wilson's December 1861 crusade against the "sordid conditions" in the Washington city jail faced by African-Americans. In Washington, African Americans were regularly detained by the city's constables as suspected fugitives and held without charges in the city jail through 1862. Not entirely surprisingly, this practice also occurred south of the Potomac in Union occupied Alexandria. 150 years ago this month, Senator Wilson, a Massachusetts Republican, rose on the Senate floor to read into the record a scathing critique of the situation in Alexandria's jail.
Sunday, January 22, 2012
Sunday, January 15, 2012
A Regiment of New York Frenchmen at Tenleytown
On January 8, 1862 President and Mrs. Lincoln attended a celebration hosted by the 55th New York Infantry at Tennalytown, D.C. to mark their receipt of a new regimental flag. Newspaper reports from the winter of 1861-62 are full of stories about various regiments being presented with regimental flags in events attended by prominent home state politicians. What made this particular flag presentation unique was that the regiment was comprised heavily of French-born New Yorkers who had answered their adopted homeland's call for volunteers. The flag presentation ceremony was scheduled for January 8th to coincide with the anniversary of the battle of New Orleans, a battle in which French Creoles had fought with Americans against the British. This at a time when Washington was stridently trying to ensure that England and France did not intervene in the war on the Confederacy's behalf. Besides, this regiment also knew how to dine.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)